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Business

Too much hope, hype on PPP?

- Boo Chanco -

The website of Bulletin carried a picture of a man protesting the SLEX rate and he carried a sign that read: SLEX Dapat Serbisyo Hindi Negosyo. My reaction was simply, ano siya… sinuswerte?

The Malaysian investor that placed a lot of money on the project is a business entity, not an Official Development Assistance (ODA) agency. Of course the Malaysian company is here for negosyo… to make a good return or profits from their investment by delivering a tollway service.

In fact, potential foreign investors are looking at how we will handle the Malaysian investor in SLEX before they seriously consider P-Noy’s flagship program called Public Private Partnership or PPP. Right now it is not looking too good. The Aquino administration is all set to launch the program with a by invitation only conference of potential investors on Nov. 18-19. It seems they are banking on this conference to tell the world we are in business.

Nothing the Aquino economic managers and P-Noy himself will say here will be credible until that Malaysian problem is resolved… or the German problem in NAIA 3 even if the Germans are also to blame. The government should have used the first hundred days to clean up the mess that has soured the experience of the private sector in such partnerships under the old BOT programs. Seriously, PPP is just BOT renamed.

Official releases claim the PPP aims to accelerate the financing, construction and operation of key government infrastructure projects. It is supposed to be part of P-Noy’s program to address the three main issues that has held back the economic growth of the Philippines in the past 20 years: the infrastructure gap, corruption and bureaucracy policies. Honestly, government does not have the wherewithal to invest in needed capex, hence the need to tap private sector resources.

According to Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima, they have looked back at over 15 years of experience in PPP in the Philippines and they are making adjustments to ensure that moving forward, some of the problems that were faced in the past years will be avoided. Problem is… investors need a lot of reassurance, given our record.

There are already skeptics even among those who sympathize with the administration. The Filipino technocrats who write briefing materials for the New York-based Global Source Partners surmised that “although we applaud the intention of the new government to raise mean growth by encouraging greater investment via public-private partnerships (PPPs), we remain unconvinced results will be seen in this area in the near term even assuming that paperwork and physical execution can be fast tracked.”

As such, the think-tank is of the view that the Aquino administration’s public-private partnership (PPP) initiative is unlikely to boost economic growth in the near-term because of the “lack of quality” of the identified projects. “The country’s economic managers have already gone to great lengths to design an infrastructure fund precisely for this purpose, but the major constraint as we see it is not a lack of funding but rather a lack of quality and skillfully prepared projects to fund as well as perceived abundance of political and regulatory risks,” Global Source said.

It said the government’s current list of PPP projects “looks thin” and “not fully prepared at this time,” save for one or two mass transport projects. It warns that “unless fully thought out, there is risk that use of private finance and through an infrastructure fund at this time may be driven by or lead to disguising public expenditure and pushing it off budget… In that case, PPP projects may just lead to higher fiscal risks and hard-to-manage contingent liabilities down the road.”

The NEDA however maintains that the PPP initiative would accelerate the rate of infrastructure spending to economic output. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary and NEDA Director-General Cayetano Paderanga told reporters that a four percent to five percent infrastructure spending share to gross domestic product (GDP) is “achievable.” The country’s present infrastructure spending to GDP is around three percent.

Paderanga said the government is not depending on the PPP initiative to raise the country’s infrastructure spending, adding that a regular budget and official development assistance (ODA) were also available to finance such projects. “The PPP is only the direct projects that you can measure. We hope of course that there would be complementary and supplementary projects that would come up together with the PPP. In other words we are trying to leverage to the PPP but because of the strategic importance of these projects, they will also have given beyond that magnifying factor,” he said.

The National Economic and Development Authority earlier said the P70-billion Metro Rail Transit (MRT)-Light Rail Transit (LRT) expansion project, which was broken into three component-projects, is ready for implementation next year.

Other projects to be rolled out next year are the P11.3-billion MRT Line 2 extension project, the P7.54 billion new Bohol airport, the P4.36 billion Puerto Princesa airport, the P10.5 billion CALA Expressway- Manila-side Section, and the P3.08 billion Daraga International Airport. But with NAIA 3 still unresolved, I doubt if any investor in his right mind will take another airport project. Also included in the PPP list are the privatization of the operation and maintenance of the Laguindingan airport, and the supply of treated bulk water for Metro Manila, the costs for both of which have yet to be determined.

This early, the government should make it clear to the people that the private sector entities investing on these projects are there for the money. If they can deliver public service in the process, well and good! But they should not expect these business entities to risk pretty large sums of money out of the goodness of their hearts.

On the SLEX problem, it shouldn’t be too difficult to compare the deal the Malaysians got to the prevailing one at NLEX. It is a matter of crunching numbers and resolving it quickly. The delay is giving our investment climate a bad reputation… one that haunts the PPP now.

I realize the SLEX and the other loose end, NAIA 3 are already in our court system. The judicial branch should take note of the urgency of resolving these cases for the sake of our economy. We absolutely cannot argue about those cases forever.

Right now, I think it is wrong for P-Noy to put too much hope and hype on PPP. That’s bound to disappoint.

P-Noy travel

Dr. RBJ sent me this reaction to a previous column.

Indeed, but how are his “receptors”? The number of Thai Air jets parked in the tarmac of Bangkok airport outnumber all the airplanes in the 3 Manila airports put together by a factor of 100+ times. Few Filipinos, who visit Bangkok, notice this gross disparity UNTIL (maybe) somebody points it out. Those, who visited Bangkok in the 60’s, may be among these few.

It took my little brother, a bank executive, now based in Kuala Lampur, a little over a year before he could understand what I was carping about when I returned to Malaysia after a 30-year absence. Quickie visits will not do it to people with average sensitivities.

Things are not so bad over here, UNTIL you travel/live elsewhere in the region. But your eyes must be receptive to realities beyond the shopping. Then perhaps, you might get a bit peeved, mightily so, if you had the opportunity to travel around a mere 30 years ago like you and I did. Bangkok and Manila were not comparable. Even the Thais will admit that.

Re: Intel in Vietnam? I am surprised, you are surprised. Last year, the American investments totaled at least 6 times more in Vietnam, their former enemies, than in the Philippines, their ally and friend (kuno)! But don’t blame the Vietnamese or the Americans. It may have something to do with the way we run things over here.

I have heard this several times here, but few listen - “It’s all about ROI’s, friendship has nothing to do with it”.

Good news/bad news - Indonesia is increasing its health allocation from 2% to 5% of the national budget. That would leave the Philippines at the level of the poorest and uneducated nations of the world.

Undies

This is from Jose Villaescusa.

Wife goes to a high end boutique, sees men’s underwear on sale. She buys a dozen of the same color for her hubby.

She gets home and gives the package to her hubby. He opens it then starts protesting: “Honey, why buy me the same color? People would think I don’t change underwear!”

WIFE: “Which people?”

Oops..gotcha!!!

Boo Chanco’s e-mail address is [email protected]

vuukle comment

AQUINO

BANGKOK AND MANILA

BOO CHANCO

DAPAT SERBISYO HINDI NEGOSYO

INFRASTRUCTURE

P-NOY

PPP

PROJECTS

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